I've often heard people apply the suffix -ed after a verb to create phrase, "I'm $verb'ed out." They do this to mean that they've already done $verb, and don't intend to do it in the immediate future because they've already done too much of it, or just the right amount.

So I'm sitting in my hotel room watching the boob tube and I'm wondering how would I apply this context to "eat" such that it doesn't get interpreted as dirty innuendo. It's a preventative measure, I know I'm not good at that.

But, what if you want to use the generic to imply all foods.
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Evan CarrollMay 23 '13 at 15:17

1

I would say "I'm full up" personally. I think the problem is that verbs with a past tense form of -ed work well with 'verb-ed out', but others, like 'eat/ate' don't. They just don't trip off the tongue well.
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ElendilTheTallMay 23 '13 at 15:33